Rather then simply delete it, or run it through Google Translate to be butchered and jumbled, I figure I'd leave it for a Spanish-speaker to translate, if they feel like doing so.

We can use this thread for posting similar "Help, what's the translation for this?", instead of piggy-backing on the "Mojibakes Repair Thread" (which seems to have been used for a similar purpose in past).

Four years in school, a couple of courses at the University and searching Facebook walls and bios of South American thrash bands for some mention of a demo release. Watching Breaking Bad and [REC] with subtitles helps as well.

I translated some of the bio, that which seemed relevant. Some information was also about his bands and songs specifically. I added those pieces to the respective pages.

Honestly, for these kind of texts, I just nuke them. They violate the rules in more than one way; not only they aren't in English, but they usually contain tons of non-neutral, self-promoting crap too, and it's not our job to rewrite or correct other user's mistakes, so I just remove these bios entirely.

_________________

Von Cichlid wrote:

I work with plenty of Oriental and Indian persons and we get along pretty good, and some females as well.

Markeri, in 2013 wrote:

a fairly agreed upon date [of the beginning of metal] is 1969. Metal is almost 25 years old

I wasn't even sure if it had some valid information that might've been of interest to some users. Granted, if I was going to translate that, I'd be filtering out all the self-promotional/crap talk and leave in only parts that you'd expect to see on Wikipedia.

Could somebody familiar with Czech please go through Epitaf's line-up and confirm that the instruments the past/present members played are all correct...? I only glossed through the translation, but it'd appear that some of the instruments are wrong, according to the band's bio.

Could somebody familiar with Czech please go through Epitaf's line-up and confirm that the instruments the past/present members played are all correct...? I only glossed through the translation, but it'd appear that some of the instruments are wrong, according to the band's bio.

I'm done with the lineups and year ranges. Even though I'm NOT familiar with Czech per sé, I have made big updates and cross-referencing information about Root mostly on Czech sites, and that gave me some experience with the language (along with google translate). Since no one had answered, I took the liberty of doing it myself.

No, not really. But the site mentioned as Source/Evidence in the Hizaki-report is usually very reliable, and there's tons of info on it on Japanese bands and artists. (Don't know if it's still up-dated regularly though. Not for Versailles and Loudness anyway.)

There's a supposed address for this label on that page, but I don't really trust Google Translate's interpretation of it.

If a Chinese speaker could translate the address and check if the address on the label's page is correct, I'd be thankful.

EDIT: Okay wait, I think it might've confused "label" for "publisher" on the page. Jesus, I can imagine a bunch of Chinese reading this and rofling their arses off at the dumb English speaker stumbling across their page. Eh... is my suspicion right?

i think there is a big problems for not-Western characters (like Japanese, Korean o Russian): people can't read them, so for example, I can' know the pronunciation of a name of an album, a band etc.

A solution must be find as soon as possible, overview I know is very hard to make it.

The policy is to include the Latinized band name in the additional notes (and also the alternate spelling field so that you can search for it in Latin script). Feel free to report pages without it and give the Latinized spelling.

If there's no official translation of the band's name or album title, we just add a transliteration in the additional notes, although a formal translation is generally encouraged.

E.g., on this album, it'd be pointless to bother adding the transliteration of 十殿 since Taiwanese speakers know how to pronounce it, and English speakers who don't know Taiwanese won't bother referring it it by its Taiwanese name.

If they want to know how it's pronounced, there's always Google Translate.

Yeah, transliterations and translations should be needed, I sincerely do not have a clue about how to pronounce bands like these nor their albums http://www.metal-archives.com/bands/%D0 ... %B6/121354 (by the way the На Самом Краю album of this band have also a different lineup in Cyrillic alphabet in the additional notes)

Transliteration does not make much sense if you do not know that language at all. If you don't know how to pronounce Japanese, you probably want transliteration. But does it tell you how to pronounce it properly? No. Think about it, does a non-Polish speaker know how to pronounce this album title correctly, even though it is written in Latin letters? I guess not. Another example, how are we suppose to "transliterate" the German word ich or über to an English speaker? That would be a difficulty since there are sound not found in English.

Biography written in Spanish (no English version available), and the results are too mangled when run through a translator. Appears like the year of formation for the band's MA entry is incorrect too, from what I could gather... somebody care to go through it? Maybe even translate the bio for the MA page, if they're feeling extra helpful?

Biography written in Spanish (no English version available), and the results are too mangled when run through a translator. Appears like the year of formation for the band's MA entry is incorrect too, from what I could gather... somebody care to go through it? Maybe even translate the bio for the MA page, if they're feeling extra helpful?

I've updated it a bit. Unfortunately there's no mention of when exactly they changed name to Halógena. Only that Roberto Barrionuevo joined a few months after the name change and that it happened before the release of the first album. It would be nice to have some other source than Wikipedia, though...

I hardly speak it, I only understand it. I take/took courses on it in university (had to do a beginner's course anyway for my studies - you need to learn a language you hadn't learned before if you want to take post-graduate courses of German linguistics), and for phrases like that my knowledge's enough.